10 Ten Things I Hate About You -
The movie doesn't end with a grand, sweeping apology. It ends with Patrick buying Kat a guitar (not a car or jewelry) and the two of them driving off to a Sonic Youth concert. It’s messy. They still have trust issues. But they choose each other anyway. It’s realistic, hopeful, and infinitely cooler than a standard happy ending.
We hate how much we love it. But honestly? Not even close, not even a little bit, not even at all. 10 Ten Things I Hate About You
Unlike many teen movies where sisters are rivals, Bianca (Larisa Oleynik) and Kat have a complicated but loving relationship. Bianca starts as a shallow social climber, but by the end, she respects Kat’s strength. The movie argues that you can be feminine and a feminist, and that sisters ultimately have each other's backs. The movie doesn't end with a grand, sweeping apology
The title of the movie comes from this scene. After Patrick humiliates her by revealing the bet, Kat reads a poem for English class titled "10 Things I Hate About You." It starts funny ("I hate the way you talk to me") and slowly crushes your soul ("But mostly I hate the way I don't hate you. Not even close, not even a little bit, not even at all"). Julia Stiles’ delivery is raw and heartbreaking. They still have trust issues
10 Things I Hate About You is a perfect storm of writing, acting, and 90s aesthetic. It taught a generation that you could be smart, angry, and still fall in love; that you could be a dork and still get the girl; and that a grand gesture can be as simple as singing a bad cover song in a stadium.
Twenty-five years later, it’s not just nostalgia that keeps us watching. Here are the 10 things we love about 10 Things I Hate About You .
Before he was a legendary Joker or a brooding cowboy, Heath Ledger was Patrick Verona—the mysterious, sardonic bad boy with a heart of gold. Opposite him, Julia Stiles’ Kat Stratford wasn’t your typical mean girl or damsel. She was angry, smart, and unapologetically feminist. Their banter feels real, and their slow-burn romance is the gold standard for enemies-to-lovers tropes.